Young Dorothy wants to run away from home. Later, she’ll move heaven and earth
to return home.
Daniel won’t compromise his principles as an artist when he doesn’t like the way
he’s directed to play a scene. When he’s later called to play an outrageous
roll in order to be close to his children, he’ll perform in any way necessary.
What happens to change the goals/outlooks/lives of these characters?
An inciting incident.
All good stories depend on an inciting incident to get them going.
What distinguishes an inciting incident from other incidents in a story? The
inciting incident, the event which jumpstarts the story and prompts protagonists
to make lofty goals, is an event which will change a character’s life, his
outlook on life or both.
In the Wizard of Oz
Dorothy wants to run away from home when a neighbor woman takes away Toto, her
dog. Losing her pet is an "incident" in her life, but it isn’t a life changing
incident. Landing in Oz is a major event, the inciting incident which is going
to change everything about her outlook on life.
In "Mrs. Doubtfire" Daniel gets fired from another acting job because he won’t
follow the director’s instructions. Since he has a history of being
irresponsible, losing another job is an ordinary incident. When his wife tells
him she wants a divorce because she’s tired of his childish behavior, he is
faced with a major event in his life, an inciting incident. Everything in his
life is going to change.
Usually, an inciting incident will cause characters to set new goals. In "Home
Alone," for example, Kevin’s mother wants nothing more than a nice family
Christmas in France, but when she leaves Kevin behind in Chicago (inciting
incident) her goal mimic’s Dorothy’s in "Oz." She will move heaven and earth to
get home.
However, an inciting incident can sometimes lead to the fulfillment of a goal.
In the Sandra Bullock movie "While You Were Sleeping" she daydreams of having a
particular man in her life. One day, out of the blue, this man meets with
tragedy, and she saves his life. This inciting incident leads directly to
Sandra’s character reaching a goal--sort of. Most definitely, the event changes
her life and her outlook on life completely.
When a writer plots a story for screen or novel or short story, whether she’s
writing comedy or drama, fantasy or time travel, she chooses a specific event
for her protagonist which will challenge him in every way. Then she makes his
life really complicated, the more mixed up, twisted up and complex the
better--all of it coming from the one major event in the character’s life, the
inciting incident.
And, don’t we readers love it?
Fran Shaff, Award-Winning Author
website
8 comments posted.
challenges and conflicts are the things that keep you from putting the book down and I love them.
(Vickie Hightower 12:29pm June 17, 2010)
Interesting aspect of writing. I am trying to finish a book that is truly lacking in excitement. I read over 100 pages before anything happened. Too much just background. Books need incidents to make them interesting.
(Gladys Paradowski 10:26pm June 17, 2010)
This book reminds me of certain things that have happened in my life, and I can't wait to read it!! Thank you for such an interesting blog!!
(Peggy Roberson 6:55am June 18, 2010)
Thanks to everyone who has stopped by to read "Inciting News." Thanks to all commenters too. I appreciate your insight and perceptions.
(Fran Shaff 5:22pm June 18, 2010)